Nashville artist Belle Kinney created the sculpture, which was cast by the Tiffany Studio and dated 1917. The monument, one-and-one-half times life size, is the oldest public bronze sculpture in Jackson and the only one memorializing women. The sculpture features three figures: a central female representing Fame, to her left a dying Confederate soldier, and to her right a Confederate woman on whose head Fame is placing a laurel wreath, the symbolic gesture of victory, giving the monument its meaning as a memorial to women. The monument is a Mississippi Landmark, giving it protected status. The monument stands on the south side of the Capitol, facing Mississippi Street.

The inscriptions:

Our Mothers (South face)

To the women of the Confederacy “Whose pious ministrations to our wounded soldiers soothed the last hours of those who died far from the objects of their tenderest love, whose domestic labors contributed much to supply the wants of our defenders in the field, whose zealous faith in our cause shone a guiding star undimmed by the darkest clouds of war, whose fortitude sustained them under all the privations to which they were subjected, whose floral tribute annually expresses their enduring love and reverence for our sacred dead; and whose patriotism will teach their children to emulate the deeds of our revolutionary sires.” Jefferson Davis

United Confederate Veterans honor the memory of the Confederate women of Mississippi.

Our Daughters (East face)

Devoted daughters of the heroic women and noble men, they keep the mounds of loved ones sweet with flowers and perpetuated in marble and bronze the granite characters of a soldiery that won the admiration of the world and a womanhood whose ministrations were as tender as an angels benediction.

Our Sisters (North face)

Their smiles inspired hope; their tender hands soothed the pangs of pain; their prayers encouraged faith in god; and when the dragon of war closed its fangs of poison and death, they like guardian angels, entwined their hands in their brothers arms, encouraged them to overcome the losses of war and to conquer the evils in its wake, adopting as their motto: “Lest We Forget”.

Our Wives (West face)

They loved their land because it was their own, and scorned to seek another reason why, calamity was their touchstone; and in the ordeal of fire their fragility was tempered to the strength of steel.
Angels of comfort, their courage and tenderness soothed all wounds of body and of spirit more than medicines.
They girded their gentle hearts with fortitude, and suffering all things, hoping all things fed the failing fires of patriotism to the end.
The memory and example of their devotion shall endure.

Date Installed or Dedicated: 01/01/1917Name of Government Entity or Private Organization that built the monument: United Confederate VeteransUnion, Confederate or Other Monument: ConfederateRating (1-5): Photo or photos will be uploaded.: yesRelated Website: Not listed

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